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May 28, 2013
05/13
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what we learned after the fact about tunisia. and this, in fact, has given rise to some tensions within the federal government around user protections against with surveillance. so, for example, tour, that's an anonymizing tool that operates at the network level, so below applications, above the physical link between your devices and the network, was funded in part by the department of defense. and the state department has given out, i believe it's tens of millions of dollars to projects to promote privacy and security tools for use overseas. meanwhile, we hear from the department of justice that there's a need to revise federal law, in particular the communications assistance to law enforcement act that would require certain forms of back doors for authorized surveillance. >> what do you mean by back door? spell it out. >> so intentionally-designed loopholes in the guarantees i talked about earlier. so if you have a system that's designed to provide confidentiality, integrity and authenticity, you build in from the get go some w
what we learned after the fact about tunisia. and this, in fact, has given rise to some tensions within the federal government around user protections against with surveillance. so, for example, tour, that's an anonymizing tool that operates at the network level, so below applications, above the physical link between your devices and the network, was funded in part by the department of defense. and the state department has given out, i believe it's tens of millions of dollars to projects to...
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Feb 9, 2013
02/13
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as tunisia deals from the fallout, tensions are on the rise in egypt. protests took place across the country after hard line muslim clerics issued fat with as calling for secular and opposition leaders to be killed. protesters clashed outside the presidential pal as in cairo. dem stracors accused them of betraying and of favors islamists over secular combrists. french troops have been securing the town a day after they chased islamist fighters from one of their last remaining strongholds. the soldiers have been combing the town for militants and weaponry but malli is still far from secure. the president apologized on tv for an attack by disgruntled soldiers on paratroopers in which two lost their lives. a cashmiri man has been hanged. he was executed in an indian prison after his wife petitioned for mercy was rejected earlier this week. several rights groups say the former fruit march nt did not get a fair trial. he confessed in tv interviews to helping plan the attack that killed 14 people. he later denied any involvement and said he was tortured into
as tunisia deals from the fallout, tensions are on the rise in egypt. protests took place across the country after hard line muslim clerics issued fat with as calling for secular and opposition leaders to be killed. protesters clashed outside the presidential pal as in cairo. dem stracors accused them of betraying and of favors islamists over secular combrists. french troops have been securing the town a day after they chased islamist fighters from one of their last remaining strongholds. the...
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Jan 23, 2013
01/13
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i called the president of tunisia and said you have to send reinforcements right now. our embassy is going to be over run. he sent it. it stopped. the government has been responsive understanding the terrorists do not just threaten us in western countries, they threaten the stability and the future of the governments. we have to help them the way we helped colombia years ago. finally, we need to do a better job conveying a counter narrative to the extremist jihadist narrative. i have said to this committee before with a lot new members on it, we have abdicated broadcasting arena. yeses we have private stations, cnn, fox, nbc, all of that, they are out there, they convey information but we are not doing what we did during the cold war. our broadcasting board of governors is practically defunct in terms of capacity to be able to tell a message around the world. we are abdicating the ideological arena. we need to get back into it. we have the best values and best narrative. most people in the world just want to have a good, decent life that is supported by a good decent j
i called the president of tunisia and said you have to send reinforcements right now. our embassy is going to be over run. he sent it. it stopped. the government has been responsive understanding the terrorists do not just threaten us in western countries, they threaten the stability and the future of the governments. we have to help them the way we helped colombia years ago. finally, we need to do a better job conveying a counter narrative to the extremist jihadist narrative. i have said to...
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May 28, 2013
05/13
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what we learned after the fact about tunisia. and this, in fact, has given some rise to some tensions within the federal government around user protection against surveillance. so, for example, tor, that's an anonymizing tool that operates at the network level, so below applications, above the physical link between your devices and the network was funded in part by the department of defense. and the state department has given out i believe it's tens of millions of dollars to projects to promote privacy and security tools for use overseas. meanwhile, we hear from the department of justice that there's a need to revise federal law, in particular a law called calea, the communications assistance to law enforcement act, that would require certain forms of back doors for authorized surveillance. >> what do you mean by back door? spell it out. >> so, so intentionally-designed loopholes in the guarantees i talked about earlier. so if you have a system that's designed to provide confidentiality, integrity and authenticity, you build in f
what we learned after the fact about tunisia. and this, in fact, has given some rise to some tensions within the federal government around user protection against surveillance. so, for example, tor, that's an anonymizing tool that operates at the network level, so below applications, above the physical link between your devices and the network was funded in part by the department of defense. and the state department has given out i believe it's tens of millions of dollars to projects to promote...
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Jan 9, 2013
01/13
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she was peppered with questions about the release of him in tunisia. she said it was simply not a matter for the state department to comment on. listen. >> the president has committed that we will see justice in this case. we have confidence that we will see justice in this case. but the fbi has the lead. they have to do this right. it is their business we support them in that business. i will send you to them on the status of the case. >> we did as victoria new land suggested and asked the fbi for their comment they told us they had none, shep. >> shepard: are we clear yet on whether the libyan government is willing or able to help with this? >> we are pretty clear that they are neither willing or able the problem in benghazi is that it really isn't controlled by the libyan government. various militias control various parts of that city. in fact, the government official who was supposedly in charge of overall security in benghazi was assassinated just two months after the murder of ambassador stevens and those three other americans. the libyan governm
she was peppered with questions about the release of him in tunisia. she said it was simply not a matter for the state department to comment on. listen. >> the president has committed that we will see justice in this case. we have confidence that we will see justice in this case. but the fbi has the lead. they have to do this right. it is their business we support them in that business. i will send you to them on the status of the case. >> we did as victoria new land suggested and...
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she is here to let you know that her brothers and sisters back in tunisia are here with you and are making the demands we are making here in the u.s. would you please join me in welcoming wataeh. >> i am really short, so i have to bring this out a little bit. i want to humanize this for everyone a little bit. think about what it means to be living in fear. think about that for just two seconds. what does it mean for you to live in fear? i will tell you one thing, if we were living in fear, we would not be here today, we would not teeing -- we would not be expressing our honest opinions about what is going on right now. honestly to understand living in fear and what it means, we have to go back to what surveillance means. what is surveillance? systematic, routine, purposeful monitoring of citizen activity, the mundane acuity of the average citizen. i want to really remind everyone that surveillance is not necessarily only digital, it is also physical, which is how it started in tunisia. the development of technology has only refined the art of surveillance. it only shifted things from being
she is here to let you know that her brothers and sisters back in tunisia are here with you and are making the demands we are making here in the u.s. would you please join me in welcoming wataeh. >> i am really short, so i have to bring this out a little bit. i want to humanize this for everyone a little bit. think about what it means to be living in fear. think about that for just two seconds. what does it mean for you to live in fear? i will tell you one thing, if we were living in...
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May 28, 2013
05/13
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so in tunisia and egypt, you see, you see sort of in due eyes ya you -- tunisia you see one party -- [inaudible] and in egypt we have sort of three major parties or two major parties, really the justice party and the, and the new party of the salafi party. and this is -- and then on both sides you have a host of sort of more secular, smaller-orr credibilitied parties. -- oriented parties. in the elections just to establish this, you see that in egypt -- and here we are not talking the votes, but we are talking the seats, the proportion of seats in each of the parliamentary elections, you saw that the islamist parties got almost 75% in egypt while they got 45% in tunisia. so one, so what were sort of the one of the defining factors for the success of the islamist parties in these two elections. if you look at the, a at sort of how the party landscape played out in these elections, so first thing is these elections were devoid of sort of public policy, there was very little said about what are solutions to the key problems of, key economic problems, for example, of tunisia and egypt an
so in tunisia and egypt, you see, you see sort of in due eyes ya you -- tunisia you see one party -- [inaudible] and in egypt we have sort of three major parties or two major parties, really the justice party and the, and the new party of the salafi party. and this is -- and then on both sides you have a host of sort of more secular, smaller-orr credibilitied parties. -- oriented parties. in the elections just to establish this, you see that in egypt -- and here we are not talking the votes,...
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Jan 23, 2013
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he went to tunisia. he beliefs that the investigation is proceed iing. i know the fbi has been on the hill doing briefings with certain committees. i don't know about this committee. but i certainly hope that the fbi is able to investigate, identify, and hold responsible those who waged this attack against us. and i think based on their work, they feel that they are pursuing some very positive leads. >> okay. my understanding is the tunisian person who was held was released by a judge there. and that person has been released. so basically we don't really know at this point who did it. >> well, congressman, i confirmed with director muller who was just in tunisia meeting with their high officials that this person is basically under law enforcement surveillance. and forbidden to leave. director muller told me that that had been confirmed to him by the tunisians. >> all right. just very briefly, we don't know who -- no one's been held accountable, charged with this offense. before gadhafi was taken out, my understanding is the nation of qatar shipped in 18
he went to tunisia. he beliefs that the investigation is proceed iing. i know the fbi has been on the hill doing briefings with certain committees. i don't know about this committee. but i certainly hope that the fbi is able to investigate, identify, and hold responsible those who waged this attack against us. and i think based on their work, they feel that they are pursuing some very positive leads. >> okay. my understanding is the tunisian person who was held was released by a judge...
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we have had attacks on the embassy in tunisia. on september 14. you had the flag flying in egypt. you had all of the attacks on u.s. interest throughout the region with basically no response from the u.s. government. i don't think there is any question that they are emboldened. the key thing to remember here. we talk about this last night. the groups have been growing in strength over the past several years. this is not the first person to do it. the commander in july said, "the u.s. government missed an opportunity to deal with al-qaeda in the aqim when they had a chance." that devastating indictment from the administration. >> bret: we will hear more about the policy arguments ahead of secretarybe clinton testifying january 23 about benghazi, too. that is it for the panel. but stay tuned to see a video that may be too close for comfort. living with moderate to severe rheumatoid arthritis means living with pain. it could also mean living with joint damage. humira, adalimum, can help treat more than just the pain. for many adults, humira is clinically proven to help relieve pain a
we have had attacks on the embassy in tunisia. on september 14. you had the flag flying in egypt. you had all of the attacks on u.s. interest throughout the region with basically no response from the u.s. government. i don't think there is any question that they are emboldened. the key thing to remember here. we talk about this last night. the groups have been growing in strength over the past several years. this is not the first person to do it. the commander in july said, "the u.s....
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Jan 17, 2013
01/13
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he was freed january 7th after tunisia authorities cited a lack of evidence. >> a lot of these groups are emboldened after benghazi and series of missteps by the american groivment trying to investigate what happened in benghazi. >> after he was interviewed on al sharia posted pictures showing the three fbi agents involved. >> it was meant to be provocative and meant to show that the fbi cannot operate with total immunity else somewhere. >> the head of the house intelligence committee who is regularly briefed on the case says fbi agents are not getting enough support for their investigation. >> just not going well. it's slow. it is -- we're not getting great cooperation from governments that should be cooperating. number two, and it doesn't seem it's getting the resources and the attention the administration should give to it to it actually get to the bottom of this. >> fbi headquarters declined to comment. separately fox news was told that fbi agents got useful information when they questioned him but there was not enough to rule in him n. or out of benghazi attack, bill. >> bill: ca
he was freed january 7th after tunisia authorities cited a lack of evidence. >> a lot of these groups are emboldened after benghazi and series of missteps by the american groivment trying to investigate what happened in benghazi. >> after he was interviewed on al sharia posted pictures showing the three fbi agents involved. >> it was meant to be provocative and meant to show that the fbi cannot operate with total immunity else somewhere. >> the head of the house...
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Oct 23, 2013
10/13
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first in tunisia and then in egypt, popular protests toppled ng-serving autocratdts while gaddafi was ousted. regimes have proven resilient and in several cases willing to use extreme levels of violence to maintain their survival. and so in the waning months of the third year what has been dubbed the arab spring, the future of a large swath of the global community remains uncertain. with egypt under military control and syria ablaze, it is not surprising that many here in the united states and elsewhere in the west view each new development with concern that an already volatile region could spiral completely out of control. the situation in syria is undoubtedly grim, and egypt faces a prolonged period of instability, but the news is not uniformerly bad. in tunisia, the government, headed by the hinada party, demands it hand over power to a caretaker government and scheduled new elections. tiny tunisia could again show its larger neighbors that a democratic transition, even an extended one of several intermediate steps, is possible in a region bufted by the cross-currents of religion,
first in tunisia and then in egypt, popular protests toppled ng-serving autocratdts while gaddafi was ousted. regimes have proven resilient and in several cases willing to use extreme levels of violence to maintain their survival. and so in the waning months of the third year what has been dubbed the arab spring, the future of a large swath of the global community remains uncertain. with egypt under military control and syria ablaze, it is not surprising that many here in the united states and...
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Jun 12, 2013
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everybody says that's not where we want these countries to go for instance in egypt and tunisia we would rather them end up by turkey like government. the problem is and the reason there are people on the streets it is not what appears. in turkey islamist government extremely aauthoritarian. started out elected and like putin in russia also elected and dismantle democracy becoming aauthoritarian. there are more journalists in jail in turkey an in china. he has had trumped up charges against opponents in the military, judiciary, et cetera. the reason this is a different uprising than the ones in egypt and elsewhere uprising by islamist government the ones in the arab world were against secular dictators with the islamist waiting in the wing and grabbing power. here it's anti-islamist. the first since the one in 2009 in iran. but it looks as if the government is in no mood to have any compromise. >> bret: kirsten, what about the administration? the president weighing in here? he has talked about a lot of other hot spots around the world including all the times he talked about egypt. he has
everybody says that's not where we want these countries to go for instance in egypt and tunisia we would rather them end up by turkey like government. the problem is and the reason there are people on the streets it is not what appears. in turkey islamist government extremely aauthoritarian. started out elected and like putin in russia also elected and dismantle democracy becoming aauthoritarian. there are more journalists in jail in turkey an in china. he has had trumped up charges against...
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Nov 20, 2013
11/13
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um he reads off a long list of countries syria palestine tunisia egypt are endless. what does he mean shore what i see bergeron is that. the serious civil war it's a bit of that year the united states. it was a bit in syria the spotting is a sample. that never ends well the order stated what we're saying is that sectarian reaction. the sunni radicals true at the half the pasta the kit but just sat there and she urged sunni because. ayatollah sistani just yesterday. set in once i start to step down ayatollah sistani is a shia leader in iraq a shiite religious leader she is already awesome it's interesting as the cow all. does show that over the iranian it all. want to get out of sight. syria they don't want their country's already so the pastor really isn't representing the majority of the iranian people they are not happy with this war and syria the half but they did awesome and when he mentions all those countries was doing it i think he's trying to say that. he's trying to get the hatters parade on the side of the revolution so he mentioned it to asia riviera sprin
um he reads off a long list of countries syria palestine tunisia egypt are endless. what does he mean shore what i see bergeron is that. the serious civil war it's a bit of that year the united states. it was a bit in syria the spotting is a sample. that never ends well the order stated what we're saying is that sectarian reaction. the sunni radicals true at the half the pasta the kit but just sat there and she urged sunni because. ayatollah sistani just yesterday. set in once i start to step...
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the arab springs uprising began in tunisia two years ago. until this week, that country avoided the recent chaos found in neighboring egypt. >>> some of the most intense conditions we've seen from the storm slamming the northeast are up in massachusetts. the weather channel's mike seidel in the heart of it. he has more from revere beach. take a look. >> reporter: so far we've been hit by wind gusts to 45 miles an hour. look at the snow blowing horizontally. you can hardly see down the beach as the sun goes down. visibility down to about half a mile. the tide is way out in new england. they have about a 10-foot change between high tide and low tide. another high tied coming in at 9:30 tonight. the tide tomorrow morning is of concern around 10:00. we'll have a surge of two feet. with the seawall and the little rise in elevation, beachfront property will be in good shape. police departments have asked for people to evacuate in marshfield and an area prone to flooding, they will have higher surge. we're expecting a four-foot tidal surge tomorrow
the arab springs uprising began in tunisia two years ago. until this week, that country avoided the recent chaos found in neighboring egypt. >>> some of the most intense conditions we've seen from the storm slamming the northeast are up in massachusetts. the weather channel's mike seidel in the heart of it. he has more from revere beach. take a look. >> reporter: so far we've been hit by wind gusts to 45 miles an hour. look at the snow blowing horizontally. you can hardly see...
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seen that the islamic movement in some of these arab spring countries is being undermined for example tunisia where we see and we're already hearing of some protests there so is this fundamentally a quote a blow to the islamic influence that we have seen in the arab spring of late. well i think the islamists are very strong and i think this is your god that they will now some people will now move on to and the tunisian opposition will take heart from what's happened in cairo and perhaps come out in the streets in large not on this thinking they can do the same thing after all to his year was the first country that had one of these revolutions in the circle the arab spring that brought islam is. it's too early to say the islamists have failed it's just that the opposition is refusing to accept the results of elections and i think they can get their way by street protests wasn't waiting for the normal electoral cycle to come up in fear four years time when there should be a normal round of elections and just in a word could there be civil war in egypt just very briefly some people say is it tha
seen that the islamic movement in some of these arab spring countries is being undermined for example tunisia where we see and we're already hearing of some protests there so is this fundamentally a quote a blow to the islamic influence that we have seen in the arab spring of late. well i think the islamists are very strong and i think this is your god that they will now some people will now move on to and the tunisian opposition will take heart from what's happened in cairo and perhaps come...
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he has tried to export the ten at the times of his party to morrow cook, to tunisia to be oppose the more radical islamization taking place and yet on his borders in syria and iraq we're seeing the fault lines between shiite clashes. inside turkey what you're seeing is the fault line between secular and a morris lammic society. >> ambassador ginsburg, you've been terrific. thank you so much for joining us to help us talk through what's happening right now in turkey. we'll be right back. [ male announcer ] what?! investors could lose tens of thousands of dollars in hidden fees on their 401(k)s?! go to e-trade and roll over your old 401(k)s to a new e-trade retirement account. none of them charge annual fees and all of them offer low cost investments. e-trade. less for us. more for you. >> you are looking at a live shot from turkey where the scene at this hour has calmed slightly pr earlier in the day but it has been a day of violence with clashes between protesters and police. turkish police have fired tear gas at anti-government demonstrators driving thousands out of istanbul's taksi
he has tried to export the ten at the times of his party to morrow cook, to tunisia to be oppose the more radical islamization taking place and yet on his borders in syria and iraq we're seeing the fault lines between shiite clashes. inside turkey what you're seeing is the fault line between secular and a morris lammic society. >> ambassador ginsburg, you've been terrific. thank you so much for joining us to help us talk through what's happening right now in turkey. we'll be right back. [...
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Aug 6, 2013
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i think tunisia is going to be fine. i think egypt is going to actually come out of this bind in the long-haul. broadway is going to work. it's going to take a decade to make it work. syria i worry about but i know one thing in syria there is no victory possible. there's only a negotiated settlement but paves the way to a transitional government that does not see the apocalypse where we blow everything up and it all comes out just fine. that's the infantile fantasy that led us into iraq and people still have this name, we will defeat the regime. to do will have a secular democracy. that's not going to work and it's not going to happen. what could happen is a slow steady path moving forward during transition and change it i thank you all very much. [applause] the book. i forgot to add i am lebanese as i think was noted and i have a book to sell. you can get them out front. that is one stereotype they go for. it's also available on line at amazon so thank you all very much. [applause] our next "washington journal" is live
i think tunisia is going to be fine. i think egypt is going to actually come out of this bind in the long-haul. broadway is going to work. it's going to take a decade to make it work. syria i worry about but i know one thing in syria there is no victory possible. there's only a negotiated settlement but paves the way to a transitional government that does not see the apocalypse where we blow everything up and it all comes out just fine. that's the infantile fantasy that led us into iraq and...
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Oct 27, 2013
10/13
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. >> in the wake of the arab spring revolution, tunisia is a hub. two-thirds of africans in europe are from algeria, morocco and tunisia headed to u.k., france, germany and italy. there are a lot of reasons for leaving. we have our correspondent in indonesia with more. >> here on the tunisian coast line the coast guard clamped down on migrants leaving this part of south africa. people are making the journey. since the beginning of the year 30,000 people have made the treasurerous journey across the seas. libya at the moment has no agreement with italy in terms of deporting people back, and there are security problems in the country. there are poorer border regions of thousands of kilometres, and little security on the coast line. that is why migrants lead from north africa. they are leaving for many reasons - for economic reasons, because they can't find work at home, and they are fleeing war, particularly those coming from somalia and eritrea and human rights abuses in ethiopia. they are paying thousands to gets on boats and can't stay in places fo
. >> in the wake of the arab spring revolution, tunisia is a hub. two-thirds of africans in europe are from algeria, morocco and tunisia headed to u.k., france, germany and italy. there are a lot of reasons for leaving. we have our correspondent in indonesia with more. >> here on the tunisian coast line the coast guard clamped down on migrants leaving this part of south africa. people are making the journey. since the beginning of the year 30,000 people have made the treasurerous...
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Jun 12, 2013
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re-establish his dominance something like a sultan over syria, over the recently changed regimes in tunisia, in libya. and there is a big split in this country with people who want a secular democracy and others who like what has been so far quite successfully i might add for the last -- economically successful anyway for the last decade, erdogan's economic democracy. >> thank you so much. richard engel, our great foreign correspondent for nbc news. >>> up next, the latest on the former nsa contractor, the young guy who broke the story about the government's online surveillance. you're watching "hardball," the place for politics. >>> welcome back to "hardball." two days after outing himself as the man who revealed details about secret nsa programs, there is still many unanswered questions. i have them certainly about edward snowden, the 29-year-old contractor working at a satellite nsa office out in hawaii, somehow got his hands on highly classified documents that had nothing to do with what he was actually working on as part of his job. how exactly did that happen? did he act alone, by the
re-establish his dominance something like a sultan over syria, over the recently changed regimes in tunisia, in libya. and there is a big split in this country with people who want a secular democracy and others who like what has been so far quite successfully i might add for the last -- economically successful anyway for the last decade, erdogan's economic democracy. >> thank you so much. richard engel, our great foreign correspondent for nbc news. >>> up next, the latest on the...
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Jan 24, 2013
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i call the president of tunisia and said you have got to send reinforcements right now. our embassy is going to be over run. he said it, it stopped. the government has been responsive understanding that these extremists to not just threaten us in western countries, they threaten the stability and feature of this government. we have to help them the way we helped colombia years ago. we need to do a better job conveying a counter narrative to the extremist g. hottest narrative. -- jihadist narrative. we have private stations, cnn, fox, nbc, all of that. but we're not doing what we did during the cold war. we are advocating the ideological carina. we have the best values, the best merited. most people in the world just want to have a good decent life that is supported by good decent job and raise their families jihadist narrative philip void. we need to get in there. we can do it successfully. >> madam secretary, thank you for your service. i was you the best in your future endeavors mostly -- iwish you the best in your future endeavors most of. [laughter] herman members an
i call the president of tunisia and said you have got to send reinforcements right now. our embassy is going to be over run. he said it, it stopped. the government has been responsive understanding that these extremists to not just threaten us in western countries, they threaten the stability and feature of this government. we have to help them the way we helped colombia years ago. we need to do a better job conveying a counter narrative to the extremist g. hottest narrative. -- jihadist...
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Jan 24, 2013
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in tunisia we protected our ambassador but our school was badly damaged. so we have to take a broader view and i think the arb gives us a start but it's not the whole story. >> >> thank you very much for your contribution securing america's place in the world the last four years and for your contribution to world peace. the report does identify specifically people who were found to have engaged in the department in systematic failures and deficiencies. i want to be clear about this, you were not one of those people, is that correct? >> that's correct. >> it was identified earlier that a report dating from the 1990's had said that the secretary should take a personal and active role in security. have you done that in four years at the state department? >> i have been very attuned to the environment in which threats are occurring, the intelligence that is available, certainly not the specific request and decision making which rests with the security professionals. >> regarding the security professionals is there anybody now in existence in the
in tunisia we protected our ambassador but our school was badly damaged. so we have to take a broader view and i think the arb gives us a start but it's not the whole story. >> >> thank you very much for your contribution securing america's place in the world the last four years and for your contribution to world peace. the report does identify specifically people who were found to have engaged in the department in systematic failures and deficiencies. i want to be clear about this,...
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was not able to interrogate a suspect in the benghazi attacks, and he was briefly held by tunisia. take a listen to this. >> tunisians did not have a basis in their law to hold him. >> so they released him. >> they did. >> where is he? we don't know. >> he's still in tunisia. >> that doesn't sound like a good system of working with our foreign partners. >> it shows the tunisians are working with their rule of law like we do. >> i know mr. rubio wants to sound ready for responsibility and if he's got some very strong testicles, but dismissing the rules and practices of a foreign nation, that's hardly the most mature way to approach international terrorism, is it? >> oh, martin, that's poppycock. come on. we should have been able to force the tunisian government to do exactly what we wanted them to do. >> we're not even in any kind of conflict with the tunisian -- >> i'm kidding, of course. while marco rubio was trying and similarly we saw this in the hearing with hillary clinton, he was trying very hard to show that he is in command of the facts and he is ready to be, you know, pres
was not able to interrogate a suspect in the benghazi attacks, and he was briefly held by tunisia. take a listen to this. >> tunisians did not have a basis in their law to hold him. >> so they released him. >> they did. >> where is he? we don't know. >> he's still in tunisia. >> that doesn't sound like a good system of working with our foreign partners. >> it shows the tunisians are working with their rule of law like we do. >> i know mr. rubio...
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Jul 19, 2013
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., from going to the country of tunisia. last year tunisia detained the first suspect in the benghazi rrorist attacks after he was deported from turkey in the weeks following the attack. tunisia, despite being a beneficiary of more than $300 million of u.s. foreign aid by the american people, refused to allow the f.b.i. access to this subject for nearly five weeks. it was overwhelm after congressional threats that cut tunisia overnment of reconsidered its position. ultimately the f.b.i. interrogation team returned to tunisia and was allowed just three hours to interview him. with his lawyer and tunisia judge present. not lang after, -- after the f.b.i. interview, he was released by the two nearbyian authorities and his release was celebrated by the terrorist group, ansar al shari'a. consider for a moment the tunisia government kept the f.b.i. interrogation team waiting on the ground for five they ultimately left the country. only under the threat of certain members of the u.s. congress did tunisia relent and allow the f.b.i.
., from going to the country of tunisia. last year tunisia detained the first suspect in the benghazi rrorist attacks after he was deported from turkey in the weeks following the attack. tunisia, despite being a beneficiary of more than $300 million of u.s. foreign aid by the american people, refused to allow the f.b.i. access to this subject for nearly five weeks. it was overwhelm after congressional threats that cut tunisia overnment of reconsidered its position. ultimately the f.b.i....
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Feb 1, 2013
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tunisia is the problem where it could become more than just a transit route as tunisia is currently fighting alongside islamists, and in mali, they return home. there's that concern. tunisia is concerned about french presence in mali. members, especially parliamentarians, they are concerned that the war in mali might become a potent recruitment for disgruntled tunisians, and fear a backlash. so far cross border links have been tenuous too far, based more on greed and criminality than ideology, but that could change. the future of tunisia and in morocco and elsewhere is that jihadigan steers, militants, and forces are destabilizing countries that are transitioning from a carrying route and have weak security institutions. tunisia authorities today are struggling to reform their dysfunctional security services. they are struggling to develop the capacity to police to counter the threats. even countries with strong security forces, there's dangerous there. morocco, for example, has been on high alert since the french intervention. we know several joined armed groups in mali, about 70 of them th
tunisia is the problem where it could become more than just a transit route as tunisia is currently fighting alongside islamists, and in mali, they return home. there's that concern. tunisia is concerned about french presence in mali. members, especially parliamentarians, they are concerned that the war in mali might become a potent recruitment for disgruntled tunisians, and fear a backlash. so far cross border links have been tenuous too far, based more on greed and criminality than ideology,...
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Jan 23, 2013
01/13
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when tunisia refused to let the f.b.i. access to harzi for more than five weeks, the administration took no public steps to use diplomatic tools like u.s. foreign assistance, pressure the tunisian government to make him available. in fact, the f.b.i. only gained access after members of congress threatened amendments to cut off foreign aid if they continued to obstruct the f.b.i. investigation. i was among those members of congress, along with lindsey graham and senator mccain and others. in the interim, i urged the administration to act immediately to suspend foreign assistance if the tunisian government permitted in obstructing the investigation. on january 4, i received a tepid response from the acting deputy, assistant administrator for public affairs at usaid, which i submit for the record, it was a bland assurance that the tunisian government was cooperating. was cooperating? five weeks and the f.b.i. had to wait? then the f.b.i. three hours to talk to him? and we gave this government $325 million last year. today i w
when tunisia refused to let the f.b.i. access to harzi for more than five weeks, the administration took no public steps to use diplomatic tools like u.s. foreign assistance, pressure the tunisian government to make him available. in fact, the f.b.i. only gained access after members of congress threatened amendments to cut off foreign aid if they continued to obstruct the f.b.i. investigation. i was among those members of congress, along with lindsey graham and senator mccain and others. in the...
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Mar 20, 2013
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there was somebody picked up in tunisia. he has been released. we give the tunisians $320 million a year. there have been no federal employees given protection to come in. no one has been subpoenaed. no one has been talked to. the people, there is still individual out of bethesda who was wounded, six months after, still going through rehabilitation. the only way -- the only way --. bill: give us rationale for why this is happening? why are these answers so elusive still? >> you know, personally i think there's a effort by the administration to cover this up, and i think the only way you're going to get to the bottom of it now is to have a select committee whereby they have subpoena authority. it can be bipartisan. you know you would have never found out what took place in watergate if you had not a select committee to look at this. it has been six months. you can see the administration is not cooperating. secretary clinton, did she even go visit the wounded out at bethesda? you need subpoena power really to protect the federal employees. their ca
there was somebody picked up in tunisia. he has been released. we give the tunisians $320 million a year. there have been no federal employees given protection to come in. no one has been subpoenaed. no one has been talked to. the people, there is still individual out of bethesda who was wounded, six months after, still going through rehabilitation. the only way -- the only way --. bill: give us rationale for why this is happening? why are these answers so elusive still? >> you know,...
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Jun 16, 2013
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particularly in egypt or tunisia or saying that any of the spaces in north africa, there are concerns about terrorism. so the first thing to recognize is when dick cheney says terrorist, he means muslim entity we don't like. second point and karen, as you say, much of the way at bush administration structured the u.s. response to terrorism was built on the idea that we were at war and that we could behave, and use our armed forces and intelligence and the bush administration was doing things that is has now come out that obama administration is doing without court support. you can feel right or wrong about it but at least at some point when half of the senior justice officials threatened to resigned, they did get a warrant. it is very much this mind-set that all muslim entities we dent like or entity -- or enemies can usefully be defined as terrorists. and obama very much to his credit, whatever you think of the tactics he used tried it move us into a different frame of thinking about how we relate to the muslim world. >> exactly. the other sort of again big issue today, syria, it see
particularly in egypt or tunisia or saying that any of the spaces in north africa, there are concerns about terrorism. so the first thing to recognize is when dick cheney says terrorist, he means muslim entity we don't like. second point and karen, as you say, much of the way at bush administration structured the u.s. response to terrorism was built on the idea that we were at war and that we could behave, and use our armed forces and intelligence and the bush administration was doing things...
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Apr 22, 2013
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is he reportedly is from tunisia. lynched in account says he linked in account says masters degree in biotechnology. swashts search warrants still being served. unclear if they had the materials to be able to blow up a train. but they everywhere. >> conspiring to interfere with transportation facilities and murdering persons for the benefit. we are alleging that these two individuals took steps and conducted activities to initiate a terrorist attack. they watched trains. >> police say they were targeting a specific train route, not necessarily a specific train. shep? >> shepard: they say there is an al qaeda link, trace? >> canadian authorities were asked at the press conference today what type of support that al qaeda was giving these suspects. was it financial support? were they giving them hardware or other materials. all these authorities would say is that al qaeda elements in iran were actually giving them guidance and direction. that's all they would say. they did say that apparently we heard iran being a part o
is he reportedly is from tunisia. lynched in account says he linked in account says masters degree in biotechnology. swashts search warrants still being served. unclear if they had the materials to be able to blow up a train. but they everywhere. >> conspiring to interfere with transportation facilities and murdering persons for the benefit. we are alleging that these two individuals took steps and conducted activities to initiate a terrorist attack. they watched trains. >> police...
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Apr 27, 2013
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there are nonviolent movement in tunisia, nonviolent in egypt, nonviolent nonviole nonviolent in tehran. there is a sec u lift bent that is increasingly along sectarian lines. what is the texture of the resistance in sir why on the ground. and when we talk about intervention or doing something, can you say from your reporting there, a thing we could do that would make things better? >> chris, what struck me, in talking to rebels on the ground in syria, is that we lump all of the rebels together in one group and assad on the other side. it is much more complicated than that. there are various stripes. seculars of various stripes. civilian activists that don't get talked to a lot. none of them agree on what comes afterwards. internen interinterventions means going in and picking sides. picking one or two or some of them. throwing guns and money at them and at the expense of the other groups. we've been down this road before, right? this is the story of iraq. this is the story of afghanistan. >> you say back during the soviet period? >> 2001. we picked sides. we threw money and guns at peo
there are nonviolent movement in tunisia, nonviolent in egypt, nonviolent nonviole nonviolent in tehran. there is a sec u lift bent that is increasingly along sectarian lines. what is the texture of the resistance in sir why on the ground. and when we talk about intervention or doing something, can you say from your reporting there, a thing we could do that would make things better? >> chris, what struck me, in talking to rebels on the ground in syria, is that we lump all of the rebels...
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as we look at the region, armed militias in libya, fierce divisions in tunisia, the brutal slaughter in syria that you yourself witnessed because you've been there, if egypt descends into prolonged mayhem, what does that mean for their neighbors in the region? >> well, it's extraordinarily dangerous and extraordinarily volatile. it has implications not just for the region but for all of us. but bottom line we have to have some realistic understanding that there are limits to what we can do. can we micromanage an outcome where essentially you've got some democratic aspirations unleashed in countries that have been subject to the strong boot in crushing of power of military governments? so it is going to be messy. but the fact that it's going to be messy doesn't mean that we now go back to the old day where is we basically support the might of the military against the aspirations of the citizens. >> right. we've learned that the u.n. security council will convene to discuss the situation in egypt. is there a confluence of international pressure that could bring this thing back to a civ
as we look at the region, armed militias in libya, fierce divisions in tunisia, the brutal slaughter in syria that you yourself witnessed because you've been there, if egypt descends into prolonged mayhem, what does that mean for their neighbors in the region? >> well, it's extraordinarily dangerous and extraordinarily volatile. it has implications not just for the region but for all of us. but bottom line we have to have some realistic understanding that there are limits to what we can...
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Jul 8, 2013
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so in the middle east we see the arab awakening, and the sport, only a spark, this little guy in tunisia, and all he wanted to do was start a little business selling fruits and vegetables. and the regulators wanted to get a bribe from him. he refused and they squashed them. how do you expect me to make a living? he just wanted to work. and worker commune, does a lot for you. work do you dignity. work, you get some income from work and you feel i deserve that, i did something and i got paid for it, deserved it. so i think in the turmoil we are seeing in the middle east and north africa come it's not going to settle down until somehow people have something to do. that's constructed. i know there are many, many other kinds of issues but that's a fundamental one. and it comes from, you can see when you take a look at the demography. >> hide into that you mentioned it, another issue that you talk about is technology and the use of technology. >> well, as i was saying, i don't think people quite appreciate the depth and meaning of information of the communication revolution, which changed the
so in the middle east we see the arab awakening, and the sport, only a spark, this little guy in tunisia, and all he wanted to do was start a little business selling fruits and vegetables. and the regulators wanted to get a bribe from him. he refused and they squashed them. how do you expect me to make a living? he just wanted to work. and worker commune, does a lot for you. work do you dignity. work, you get some income from work and you feel i deserve that, i did something and i got paid for...
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Jan 24, 2013
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a fruit vendor in tunisia who ignited the arab awakening wanted dignity and respect. he wanted to sell his fruit without corruption and abuse. that's what led him to self-emilate. the youth of tahrir square who brought egypt its change, brought a generational thirst for opportunity and roiltights govern nns, not a religious movement. they can do more to meet the challenge and responsibility of these aspirations. with the help of all of the members of this committee, i am determined to help president obama meet this moment. it is vital for our nation that we do so. the world is well aware that we face a number of immediate dangerous challenges. particularly in the middle east and south central asia. given our extraordinary interest in nonproliferation, we must resolve the questions surrounding iran's nuclear program. the president has made it definitive. we will do what we must do to prevent iran from obtaining a nuclear weapon, and i repeat here today, our policy is not containment. it is prevention. and the clock is ticking on our efforts to secure responsible compli
a fruit vendor in tunisia who ignited the arab awakening wanted dignity and respect. he wanted to sell his fruit without corruption and abuse. that's what led him to self-emilate. the youth of tahrir square who brought egypt its change, brought a generational thirst for opportunity and roiltights govern nns, not a religious movement. they can do more to meet the challenge and responsibility of these aspirations. with the help of all of the members of this committee, i am determined to help...
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Apr 27, 2013
04/13
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one of them as you rightly mentioned were the arab uprisings and specifically with tunisia and egypt. and the second was the shooting of malala at point-blank range by the taliban in pakistan. those two opportunities could have been indeed exploited to turn the tables on the extremists and to point in the case of malala, their sheer and utter brutality in targeting a child by shooting her in the head just because she wanted an education. and in egypt's case, we could have successfully rebranded democratic activism as being a viable alternative to radical islamism in the middle east. the reason we missed both those opportunities is because there's one missing element in both of those examples and that is that the young democratic activists on the grassroots in both pakistan and in egypt and north africa are missing the sort of social movement that the radical islamists have. the organized structure across society through which we can capitalize on examples such as this, and instead, what happened in both of those examples, if you were following, in both of those examples, the radical i
one of them as you rightly mentioned were the arab uprisings and specifically with tunisia and egypt. and the second was the shooting of malala at point-blank range by the taliban in pakistan. those two opportunities could have been indeed exploited to turn the tables on the extremists and to point in the case of malala, their sheer and utter brutality in targeting a child by shooting her in the head just because she wanted an education. and in egypt's case, we could have successfully rebranded...
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Aug 7, 2013
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they've been extremely active in mali, tunisia, syria. there's a sense that at no time since 2001, since 9/11 have you seen al qaeda in the middle east. >> mark, you are the author of the way of the knife been droves. you know everything there is to know. the zblt the president expressed the concern use r about using too much. we seemed to be using them as the first resort when we have a threat. >> i wish i knew everything there was to know. the speech was a milestone and the president came out and talked about these things but really in the couple months since we haven't seen a great deal of change in any kind of strategy. it's still going on in pakistan. when secretary of state kerry last weekend dated publicly that it would end it soon, u.s. officials said, no, we're not. in yemen they're still taking the lead down even despite this pledge to transition everything to the military. it's the essential element of the counter terrorism strategy. >> meanwhile, in iran, a country you know so well. everything is comparative. except for what h
they've been extremely active in mali, tunisia, syria. there's a sense that at no time since 2001, since 9/11 have you seen al qaeda in the middle east. >> mark, you are the author of the way of the knife been droves. you know everything there is to know. the zblt the president expressed the concern use r about using too much. we seemed to be using them as the first resort when we have a threat. >> i wish i knew everything there was to know. the speech was a milestone and the...
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Jan 20, 2013
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we can't say it's just yemen, just mali, just tunisia. we have to put pressure all of these groups on sardine and the united movement of jihad and all of its affiliates at the same time. >> thanks very much. >> sober take, chairman of the house committee on intelligence. appreciate it very much. >>> when we come back after the break, back to the inauguration and offer their perspective on how to navigate the potential perils of a second presidential term. [ male announcer ] you are a business pro. executor of efficiency. you can spot an amateur from a mile away... while going shoeless and metal-free in seconds. and you...rent from national. because only national lets you choose any car in the aisle...and go. you can even take a full-size or above, and still pay the mid-size price. now this...will work. [ male announcer ] just like you, business pro. just like you. go national. go like a pro. tdd#: 1-800-345-2550 consider if rolling it over to a schwab ira tdd#: 1-800-345-2550 might let you get more out of it. tdd#: 1-800-345-2550 like ear
we can't say it's just yemen, just mali, just tunisia. we have to put pressure all of these groups on sardine and the united movement of jihad and all of its affiliates at the same time. >> thanks very much. >> sober take, chairman of the house committee on intelligence. appreciate it very much. >>> when we come back after the break, back to the inauguration and offer their perspective on how to navigate the potential perils of a second presidential term. [ male announcer ]...
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Jul 4, 2013
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turkey and tunisia. cut tar welcomed it because egypt is such a cultural and economic leader in the world what happens there has broad imply calingses for other countries. the failure of egypt's first experiment of democracy does not bode well. >> it's easier for the public to say what they're against it's harder to build the consensus what you are for. >> the real problem in egypt now is moving forward. people know they are not for mubarak. they know they are not for the brotherhood. but what are they for? >> meanwhile on capitol hill. members of congress have so far held off attacking the president for his response to the crisis in egypt. jamie? >> jamie: could be days or weeks before we know the conclusion there wendell, thank you so much. live from the white house. >> we have a wildfire alert four. crews have made significant progress against the arizona wildfire that killed 19 elite firefighters. officials reporting those flames near yarnell are now 45% contained. thanks to nearly 700 firefighters w
turkey and tunisia. cut tar welcomed it because egypt is such a cultural and economic leader in the world what happens there has broad imply calingses for other countries. the failure of egypt's first experiment of democracy does not bode well. >> it's easier for the public to say what they're against it's harder to build the consensus what you are for. >> the real problem in egypt now is moving forward. people know they are not for mubarak. they know they are not for the...
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Jan 8, 2013
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nobody here has put occupy within the context of the wave of worldwide revolution that started with tunisia. those in spain are much closer to us than it tunisia or spain or egypt or any other place. >> you mentioned that you had been to west virginia and spoken to folks there and i have spent a lot of time in west virginia. what i see is poor white workers who shared distrust in the finance industry and the government and lots of things like that. how can occupy appeal to these voters who are socially conservative but are traditionally democrat? >> let's start with bill and chris. >> i just wanted to say, and with a lesson i learned from my grandfather. my grandfather raised me. my grandparents raised me, and he was from a farm in north carolina. in 1968, he voted for george wallace. even as the young person in 1968, i could not understand why he was voting for george wallace. i hope folks know who george wallace was. he was leading a segregationist movement. my grandfather said both nixon and hubert humphrey were corporate guys in suits, and they would just say whatever they think they ne
nobody here has put occupy within the context of the wave of worldwide revolution that started with tunisia. those in spain are much closer to us than it tunisia or spain or egypt or any other place. >> you mentioned that you had been to west virginia and spoken to folks there and i have spent a lot of time in west virginia. what i see is poor white workers who shared distrust in the finance industry and the government and lots of things like that. how can occupy appeal to these voters...
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Jun 11, 2013
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re-establish his dominance something like a sultan over syria, over the recently changed regimes in tunisia, in libya. and there is a big, big split in this country with people who want a secular democracy and others who like what has been so far quite successfully i might add economically kesful for the last decade erdogan's islamic democracy. >> our great foreign correspondent for nbc news. up next, the latest on the former nsa contractor, the young guy who broke the story about the government's online surveillance. you're watching "hardball," the place for politics. >>> i'm courtney reagan with your market wrap. the dow fell 116 points today. the s&p sank 16 and the nasdaq was down 36 points. google announced it will buy waze a mobile mapping service for $1.3 billion. sony playstation 4g undercutting microsoft xbox one on price. sony tagged its latest console at $399, $100 less than xbox 1. and lululemon shares plunged more than 17% after ceo christine day announce she's resigning. for now, back to "hardball." >> welcome back to "hardball"". two days after outing himself as the man who r
re-establish his dominance something like a sultan over syria, over the recently changed regimes in tunisia, in libya. and there is a big, big split in this country with people who want a secular democracy and others who like what has been so far quite successfully i might add economically kesful for the last decade erdogan's islamic democracy. >> our great foreign correspondent for nbc news. up next, the latest on the former nsa contractor, the young guy who broke the story about the...
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Feb 9, 2013
02/13
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>> senator riden, for the drones and president obama had the worst week because of tunisia and egypt and they're not paying much attention with the uprisings which they were so behind with the arab spring and this is with the obama administration. did you pia republican pick a democrat for the worst week? >> my best week is the president of france. he's done a great job around africa. he's shown real leadership there. the worst week is american policy on drones. this is going come back to haunt us. mark my word. >> molly, your picks? >> similar to susan for the best week, i said civil liberties and civil libertarians and not that anything will change in their favor. there's a little bit of outrage and the worst week, karl rove, this uprising on the right of the grassroots in the republican party trying to smack him down for his attempt to assert discipline on the part of the establishment. it's not going to be that easy. >> donald trump is part of the grassroots now. >> he sure is. >> susan del percio. >> that'sa i wrap of "ec wooen s weekends with alex witt." up next, craig melvin.
>> senator riden, for the drones and president obama had the worst week because of tunisia and egypt and they're not paying much attention with the uprisings which they were so behind with the arab spring and this is with the obama administration. did you pia republican pick a democrat for the worst week? >> my best week is the president of france. he's done a great job around africa. he's shown real leadership there. the worst week is american policy on drones. this is going come...
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Jun 11, 2013
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re-establish his dominance something like a sultan over syria, over the recently changed regimes in tunisia, in libya. and there is a big split in this country with people who want a secular democracy and others who like what has been so far quite successfully i might add for the last -- economically successful anyway for the last decade, erdogan's economic democracy. >> thank you so much. richard engel, our great foreign correspondent for nbc news. up next, the latest on the former nsa contractor, the young guy who broke the story about the government's online surveillance. you're watching "hardball," the place for politics. man: how did i get here? dumb luck? or good decisions? ones i've made. ones we've all made. about marriage. children. money. about tomorrow. here's to good decisions. who matters most to you says the most about you. at massmutual we're owned by our policyowners, and they matter most to us. ready to plan for your family's future? we'll help you get there. trust your instincts to make the call. to treat my low testosterone, my doctor and i went with axiron, the only unde
re-establish his dominance something like a sultan over syria, over the recently changed regimes in tunisia, in libya. and there is a big split in this country with people who want a secular democracy and others who like what has been so far quite successfully i might add for the last -- economically successful anyway for the last decade, erdogan's economic democracy. >> thank you so much. richard engel, our great foreign correspondent for nbc news. up next, the latest on the former nsa...
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May 10, 2013
05/13
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then on december the 7th, the feds questioned a key suspect for three hours with a tunisia judge present. but a month later, january the 8th, that suspect the only one in this case, was released. then you go forward to january the 17th. fbi director robert mueller arrived in libya to meet with senior libyan officials about all of this. now four months after the attack. it was not until last week, may 1st, 232 days later that the fbi released photos of three men they said were wanted for questioning in the benghazi attack seven months later. they believe that they were on the grounds that night and of course they would like to speak to them. now --. bill: these hearings raised a lot of headlines. if you were looking for a lot of answers they were elusive. now you start to see the pickup not just here but all the media awe cross the country. a lot more will come out on sunday this story is not getting away. martha: you have to wonder when you go to the basic fact the fbi didn't go in until 21 days later. they said it wasn't safe enough to bring folks in on the investigation. there was medi
then on december the 7th, the feds questioned a key suspect for three hours with a tunisia judge present. but a month later, january the 8th, that suspect the only one in this case, was released. then you go forward to january the 17th. fbi director robert mueller arrived in libya to meet with senior libyan officials about all of this. now four months after the attack. it was not until last week, may 1st, 232 days later that the fbi released photos of three men they said were wanted for...
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Nov 1, 2013
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you know perfectly well it is happening in libya and tunisia, in egypt, syria, iraq and lebanon, and other countries that may have the same problem that all the countries are facing. as long as al qaeda is not clearly fault by all countries and societies. we want an international war against terror. if we had tools to wage war, we would have a war against those who are killing people, calling for bloodshed, for ignorance, and do not want logic to govern our daily lives. this is why we are stating that we are calling all countries to international conferences, and by counterterrorism, i don't mean fighting terrorism only in iraq. terrorism is worldwide. terrorism is not anymore a local production. -- and iraqi production but it , international production. this is why we want to carry the task. because iraq is the first country that ever fought terrorism directly. but now, regretfully it is , coming back because of the political situation. we have two political tracks. -- we have two parallel tracks. the political track and the regime in charge of some countries of the region. if we do
you know perfectly well it is happening in libya and tunisia, in egypt, syria, iraq and lebanon, and other countries that may have the same problem that all the countries are facing. as long as al qaeda is not clearly fault by all countries and societies. we want an international war against terror. if we had tools to wage war, we would have a war against those who are killing people, calling for bloodshed, for ignorance, and do not want logic to govern our daily lives. this is why we are...
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Dec 18, 2013
12/13
by
FOXNEWSW
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it was on this day three years ago that a fruit cart vendor in tunisia set himself on fire to protest the corrupt government there and some folks point to that as that's what started the protests in the streets all across the middle east and in north africa. where are we today with the arab spring? what do you think has been the end result? when you look back three years ago and what's transpired? >> well, i don't think we're in a much different place except a lot of people are dead, a lot of refugees and a lot of turmoil but not much fundamental change in the middle east itself. the biggest single change in the last three years is the dramatic, breathtaking diminution of american influence. the return of russian influence. we're in the weakest position in the middle east we've been in in decades and at this that is directly attributable to the president's lack of strategic thinking about the region, about iran's nuclear weapons, about the region as a whole. we'll pay for this for a long time. jenna: do you think at this time next year we're still talking about syria and upheaval and
it was on this day three years ago that a fruit cart vendor in tunisia set himself on fire to protest the corrupt government there and some folks point to that as that's what started the protests in the streets all across the middle east and in north africa. where are we today with the arab spring? what do you think has been the end result? when you look back three years ago and what's transpired? >> well, i don't think we're in a much different place except a lot of people are dead, a...
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Jan 9, 2013
01/13
by
CNNW
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>> wolf, as you heard yesterday, tunisia released ali harzi. officials believe that harzi was sending descriptions on the attack while it was happening and u.s. congressman frank wolf told me that harzi for the attack. now there's a video posted on a group, a video which we believe shows ali harzi being greeted after the release and it's a nonmilitary group. there's a jihadist song that plays throughout and at the very end you hear a voice. we translated it. march my brother on the path of jihad. we cannot verify the you a then tis tea of this video but it does appear that it connects ali harzi with a known militant group in tunisia. this is going to further outrage u.s. officials and others that he's been release sdpld we're getting new information about ali spaz harzi's brother as well in. >> yes. counterterrori counterterrorism sources are telling us that his group is involved with al qaeda in iraq. there's a picture of him. he was one of about 100 detainees who escaped from a prison in iraq last september. he had been sentenced to death for
>> wolf, as you heard yesterday, tunisia released ali harzi. officials believe that harzi was sending descriptions on the attack while it was happening and u.s. congressman frank wolf told me that harzi for the attack. now there's a video posted on a group, a video which we believe shows ali harzi being greeted after the release and it's a nonmilitary group. there's a jihadist song that plays throughout and at the very end you hear a voice. we translated it. march my brother on the path...